OPINION
Relator challenges the decision of the Minnesota Commissioner of Health (commissioner) to refuse to reconsider his disqualification from working as a registered nurse in a state-licensed program. Relator argues that (1) he has a due process light to an evidentiary hearing to challenge his disqualification; (2) the basis for his disqualification was arbitrary and capricious and violated his right to substantive due process; and (3) the bases for disqualification established by Minn.Stat. §§ 245C.14-.15 (2006) are constitutionally overbroad because they mandate employment disqualification for persons convicted of crimes that do not directly relate to patient safety. Because relator’s due process rights have not been violated and we decline to consider relator’s facial-over-breadth challenge, we affirm.
FACTS
In October 2006, Champlin police were called to investigate a report that a male passenger in a vehicle was punching a female passenger. A witness reported that the male punched the female several times and pushed her out of the car, while traveling approximately 50 miles per hour. The male was later identified as relator George Marita Obara, and the female passenger was identified as his wife. Relator’s wife informed the police that during the incident relator told her, “[y]ou know I can f — ing kill you right now.” Relator’s wife suffered severe abrasions on both elbows and a large abrasion on her abdomen as a result of the incident. Relator was charged with and convicted of making ter-roristic threats and third-degree assault, both felony offenses.
Relator is a registered nurse who, at the time of the incident, worked for a program licensed by respondent Minnesota Department of Health (MDH). Because relator’s work involved direct contact with individuals served by these programs, the Department of Human Services (DHS) was required to conduct a background study on relator. This background study revealed
After MDH denied relator’s request for reconsideration, relator requested a “fair hearing,” which would allow him to continue his work pending the outcome of the hearing. That hearing was suspended pending the outcome of relator’s appeal of his criminal convictions. 1 Subsequently, relator’s employer requested that DHS perform another background study on relator. In response, a second background study was undertaken. Because the background study revealed relator’s convictions, DHS again disqualified relator from having “direct contact with or access to persons receiving services” from programs licensed by DHS or MDH.
Relator asked MDH to reconsider this second disqualification decision, claiming that the information DHS relied on to disqualify him was incorrect. Relator claimed that the claimed criminal incident was a non-physical argument and that his wife “fell out of the car.” Relator wrote, “I believe some aspects of the incident are not accurately described in the complaint and police report, but concede that my behavior contributed to the dispute with my wife and the entire incident was unfor-túnate and could have been avoided.” He submitted no other information or evidence addressing whether he had been properly convicted of the two felonies. MDH denied relator’s request without granting him an evidentiary hearing to challenge his disqualification. Relator challenges that MDH denial in this certio-rari appeal.
ISSUES
I. Was relator entitled to an evidentia-ry hearing to challenge his disqualification?
II. Was relator’s disqualification arbitrary and capricious in violation of his substantive due process rights?
III. Are Minn.Stat. §§ 245C.14-.15 unconstitutionally overbroad?
ANALYSIS
I.
Relator argues that his disqualification without an oral hearing violates his right to procedural due process of law. “Procedural due process imposes constraints on governmental decisions which deprive individuals of ‘liberty’ or ‘property' interests within the meaning of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth or Fourteenth Amendment.”
Mathews v. Eldridge,
Before applying the
Mathews
balancing test, we determine whether relator had a protected interest in his employment. In
Sweet v. Comm’r of Human Servs.,
we observed that “an individual has a property and liberty interest in pursuing private employment” and concluded that a counselor who was disqualified only from working in state-regulated facilities had “a property interest to pursue employment [in his profession] in the public sector.”
Mathews
requires that we weigh the procedures used to disqualify relator, the potential risk of an erroneous decision, and the probable value, if any, of an oral hearing.
See id.
In
Sweet,
we held that the counselor’s opportunity to submit his written case to the commissioner, along with any supporting documents, satisfied his “right to be heard.”
Id.
at 321. But we distinguished
Sweet
from
Fosselman v. Comm’r of Human Servs.,
The U.S. Supreme Court concluded in
Goldberg
that written submissions “do not afford the flexibility of oral presentations” and are “a wholly unsatisfactory basis for decision” where credibility is at issue, as it is in welfare termination proceedings.
In requesting reconsideration, relator used a form provided by DHS. Among
II.
Relator also argues that Minn. Stat. §§ 245C.14-.15 (2006) violate his constitutional right to substantive due process. Because these statutes compelled his disqualification based solely on his criminal convictions and left the commissioner no discretion to consider the facts of his case, relator argues they are arbitrary and capricious in their effect. The constitutionality of a statute is a question of law subject to de novo review.
Hamilton v. Comm’r of Pub. Safety,
A “vital part of a state’s police power” is to regulate “all professions concerned with health.”
Barsky v. Bd. of Regents of Univ.,
The public purpose of Chapter 245C is to protect the health and safety of individuals who are vulnerable due to their age or their physical, mental, cognitive, or other disabilities.
See
Minn.Stat. § 245C.22, subd. 3 (2006) (providing that, in reviewing a reconsideration request, “the commissioner shall give preeminent weight to the safety of each person served by the license holder ... over the interests of the dis
Relator claims that under Minn. Stat. §§ 245C.14-.15, an individual could escape disqualification by negotiating a stayed sentence, and thus the statute arbitrarily and capriciously “places licensees at the mercy of the vicissitudes of’ criminal prosecutors. Relator misreads the statutes. The law states that a disqualification period begins on “the discharge of the sentence imposed, if any, for the offense.” Minn.Stat. § 245C.15 (emphasis added). By the plain language of the statute, a conviction alone for a listed offense mandates disqualification whether a sentence is imposed or not. Even more significantly, a conviction is not necessary. The statutes provide for disqualification for “(1) a conviction of [or] admission to ... one or more crimes listed ...; (2) a preponderance of the evidence indicates the individual has committed an act or acts that meet the definition of the crimes listed....” Minn.Stat. § 245C.14, subd. 1.
Relator also argues that there is no legitimate basis for assuming that a disqualified individual cannot rehabilitate himself before the disqualification period expires. But relator ignores that portion of the statute that allows a disqualified individual to show that he has been rehabilitated and can be trusted to have direct contact with patients, who are generally vulnerable individuals. Minn.Stat. § 245C.22, subd. 4 (2006). Because of this right to request relief from disqualification, the statute does not arbitrarily and capriciously deny relator of his occupation.
III.
Finally, relator argues that the disqualification provisions of Minn.Stat. §§ 245C.14-.15 are overly broad on their face because they mandate the disqualification of individuals for behavior which has little, if any, relationship to patient safety. This differs from the previous issue in that, to show that the statutes are over-broad, relator must show that they intrude on a protected freedom. “[A] governmental purpose to control or prevent activities constitutionally subject to state regulation may not be achieved by means which sweep unnecessarily broadly and thereby invade the area of protected freedoms.”
Griswold v. Connecticut,
Here, the question is whether the felonies of which relator was convicted (third-degree assault and making terroristic threats) bear any relationship to patient safety. Because the population served by nurses is largely composed of infirm or otherwise vulnerable people, the state has an obvious interest in preventing professionals guilty of assaultive behavior from working with them. As a result, we conclude that relator’s disqualification based on convictions of these felonies does not “sweep unnecessarily broadly.” We need not and decline to address relator’s argu
DECISION
Because relator has already had an evi-dentiary hearing to determine his challenge to his felony convictions, relator’s procedural due process rights are satisfied. Relator has not shown that the statutes mandating his disqualification were arbitrary and capricious or that they were overbroad as applied to him. Therefore, we affirm.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Relator's convictions were affirmed by this court on November 4, 2008.
State
v.
Obara,
No. A07-1689,
